Wednesday, July 20, 2016

July 20,
1944 and November 22, 1963 Von Stauffenberg - (left) and Hitler

For many
Germans, July 20 is like December 7, September 11 and November 22 is to Americans
- a day to remember that will live in infamy.

July 20,
1944 was the day Nazi German officers tried to kill Hitler, take over the
government in a coup, come to peace terms with the Allies and try to save
Germany from being totally annihilated.

The bomb,
planted under a map table in a Wolf's Lair bunker in the Bavarian Alps by
Colonel Claus Von Stauffenberg, failed to kill Hitler, and resulted in the
arrest of thousands, much like the recent failed coup in Turkey, and the
execution of hundreds, including Von Stauffenberg.

As seen
in the Hollywood movie Valkyrie, in which Tom Cruise portrays Von Stauffenberg,
his Valkyrie plan was broken into phases, the first of which was presented and
actually approved by Hitler. The first phase of Plan Valkyrie called for the
Home Guard army to take over all major government buildings in Germany in the
event of a civil emergency, such as a revolt of the 12 million foreign slave
laborers.

The
second phase of the Valkyrie plan was the assassination of Hitler and his
closest aides, the planting of evidence to blame the assassination on the SS
and Gestapo, and the control of not only government buildings but radio
stations, newspapers and the media so, as Von Stauffenberg put it, "only the
conspiracy speaks."

While the
original Valkyrie plan didn’t succeed because the bomb failed to kill Hitler,
the basic concepts of the plan, as the Higgins Memo mentions, were studied in
detail by the CIA in order to be used against Castro.

Since the
bomb aspect of the Valkyrie plan failed, it can be assumed that that part of
the plan was changed and a more efficient mechanism of death was to be utilized,
- a sniper assault on Castro, shooting him with a high powered rifle as he rode
in an open jeep, a frequent occurrence.

But when
that plan was “disapproved” by higher authority, instead of using that plan to
kill Castro, it was turned on President Kennedy at Dealey Plaza in Dallas.

Besides
the change in use of a sniper attack instead of a bomb, the major difference
between the Valkyrie plan and the Dealey Plaza is that Valkyrie failed,
thousands of suspects were rounded up, arrested, sent to concentration camps or
executed while the Dealey Plaza operation succeeded, and only the innocent
patsy was executed, and no one was held responsible for the crimes associated
with the assassination.

Colonel Walter M. Higgins, Jr. wrote the memo of
the minutes of the September 25, 1963 meeting of the Joint Chiefs of Staff that
detailed the briefing Desmond FitzGerald gave on CIA Cuban operations and
planning, including the study of the July 20, 1944 plot to kill Hitler to be
used against Castro.

Higgins wrote that FitzGerald “felt that there had been great success
in getting closer to the military personnel who might break with Castro, and
stated that there were at least ten high-level military personnel who are
talking withCIAbut as yet are not talking to each other, since that degree of
confidence has not yet developed. He considers it as a parallel in history;
i.e., the plot to kill Hitler; and this plot is being studied in detail to
develop an approach.”

Higgins worked for the Special Assistant for
Counterinsurgency and Special Activities (SACSA) under General Victor
"Brute" Krulak, one of the most decorated Marines and combat hero of
three wars, World War II, Korea and Vietnam.

In the South Pacific, Krulak allegedly crossed
paths with JFK when the PT boat skipper took 50 of Krulak's marines off an
island under fire, and one of the marines died in JFK's bunk, prompting Krulak,
as the legend goes, to promise JFK a bottle of Three Feathers whiskey.

As chief of SACSA, Krulak reported directly to the
Secretary of Defense, and often briefed the President on his specialty - counter
insurgency warfare, but his focus was on Vietnam, not Cuba, which was something
of a CiA side show that the military assisted the CIA with supplies and
training.

Krulak used to tell the story of how once, late in
the day, he visited JFK in the Oval Office, delivering the bottle of Three
Feathers whiskey he had promised him nineteen years earlier for taking his men
off that island in the South Pacific. Krulak said that they reminisced about the
war and the marine who died in JFK’s PT boat bunk while drinking whiskey.

According to biographer Robert Coram, (“Brute – The
Life of Victor Krulak, U.S. Marine, Little, Brown, 2010), “Over the years there
would be many stories about how Krulak went from San Diego back to Washington.
The true story is that JFK read General Maxwell Taylor’s “The Uncertain
Triumph,” which convinced him to move away from Eisenhower’s nuclear doctrine
of massive retaliation and instead to embrace the concept of smaller wars.
Kennedy urged the military to place far more emphasis on counterinsurgency as a
way to handle what was becoming a growing problem in Vietnam and in other
locations around the world….To sidetrack Kennedy’s ideas – not to implement
them – the Joint Chiefs of Staff came up with a new job, special assistant for
counterinsurgency and special activities – SACSA,…and be among those who met
regularly with the president.”

Krulak had successfully developed the use of the helicopter
in combat in Korea, delivering troops and supplies and evacuating the dead and
wounded and he envisioned their use in combat in Vietnam, where counter
insurgency meant not only defeating the enemy on the battlefield, but
"winning the hearts and minds of the people."

As his biographer put it: “Reduced to basics,
Krulak’s job was to develop America’s techniques for fighting a counterinsurgency
war in Vietnam and to develop programs that would enable JFK to measure America’s
progress and the progress of South Vietnam as an ally. To do this, Krulak had
to push not only the reluctant American military and the slow-moving State
Department but also the American people to undergo a radical shift in their
thinking about the war. This war was not about taking the hill…”

Krulak is quoted as saying, “Protection is the most
important thing you can bring. After that comes health. And after that, many
things – land, prosperity, education, and privacy to name a few.”

According to Coram, “In the counterinsurgency part
of his White House job, Krulak was an abject failure. He never got across to
the American military or the American people what a war of national liberation was
all about, what the Vietnam War meant to the United States, and why America had
a stake in Southeast Asia. One reason he failed was that the government itself
did not understand these issues.”

“During
these meetings, Krulak was duel-hatted. As the special assistant for counterinsurgency,
he was the government’s top expert on counterinsurgency matters. As the special
assistant for special activities, he held one of the most sensitive jobs in the
U.S. government: liaison between the military and the CIA. This was the blackest
of the black holes and involved some of the most highly classified matters of
national defense. It meant that in Vietnam (and Cuba), Krulak was in charge of
psychological warfare and covert activities against the enemy, a job that in a
few years would be turned over to a much larger group with the innocuous name
Studies and Observation Group (SOG).”

After one briefing where there were reports of
large desertions by South Vietnamese regular army troops, JFK sent Krulak and a
mid-level State department officer, both going in different directions when they
got there, with Krulak flying by helicopter to remote military bases
close to the combat. When they returned and gave such disparate reports, JFK
asked if they went to the same country.

“The arcane, secretive, and highly sensitive
practice of ‘disinformation’ was Krulak’s responsibility during the Cuban
Missile Crisis of October 1962. Even today it is difficult to sort out what was
real and what was a ruse during those days when the world came close to nuclear
war. And despite a host of books about the crisis, the CIA, and clandestine
operations, it is difficult to know exactly which of the black arts Krulak was
practicing. That he was involved is made clear in several books. But doing
what? Dis the war planes being moved to Georgia and Florida herald an attack on
Cuba, or were they a diversion? Was there really a host of American submarines
in Cuban waters, or was that a rumor designed to pull the Cuban navy offshore?”

Krulak, it appears, could have been like the Marine
hero of “Seven Days in May,” played in the movie by Kurt Douglas, a mid-level
officer who picked up on the coup d'etat the Joint Chiefs of Staff were
planning, and warned the president, except Krulak apparently wasn't paying
close attention to the Cuban affairs, where the coup plans to be used against
JFK were brewing.

“According to the White House visitor log, his
first one-on-one meeting with Kennedy came on August 21, 1963. Between then and
November 1, he had ten private meetings with the president, which lasted
anywhere from twenty minutes to more than two hours. The subject of most of
those meetings is listed simply as ‘Vietnam.’ No topic is listed for others.”

Colonel Fletcher Prouty (USAF) was the first to
call attention to Krulak and the SACSA office in the Pentagon was just down the
hall from Prouty and the ACSI – Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence (US
Army Reserves) - the intelligence unit that was keeping tabs on what was going
on in Dallas.

After the death of the President Prouty sent Krulak
a photo of a man in suit and tie walking past the Texas School Book Depository
on the day of the assassination, asking if he recognized the person, to which
Krulak replied that it sure did look like their old friend Gen. Lansdale, who
like Krulak, specialized in covert ops, counter-insurgency and psychological
warfare in Cuba and Vietnam.

John Newman traced Lansdale's movements and learned
Lansdale was in Fort Worth that morning, possibly in the same hotel JFK and LBJ
stayed that night.

Was Lansdale in Dallas that day? Both Prouty and
Krulak thought so.

While Krulak was preoccupied with Vietnam, Cuba was
the subject that comes into play in regards to the assassination, and the
Higgins memo, besides calling attention to the CIA’s study of the July 20, 1944
assassination attempt on Hitler, and its adaption to use against Castro, there
are other bullet point issues that come into play.

Other issues in the Higgins Memo – that was written
for General Krulak by his assistant concerning communications, planning, security
and a letter that was so secret it could only be read and returned to sender:

14. General LeMay then questioned the advisability of utilizing a
communication technique to install a radio capability which would permit
break-in on Castro broadcasts. He stated that an Air Force officer named
McElroy was available to talk to Mr. FitzGerald on the matter, and Mr.
FitzGerald accepted this offer.

• 15. The conference closed with General
LeMay directing that Mr. FitzGerald's planners meet with General Krulak's
people and work out the details as to how the military can assist in supporting
these operations. After Mr. FitzGerald departed, General LeMay gave added
directions to Colonel Higgins to initiate necessary steps for planning.

• 16. After the JCS meeting Admiral Riley
called Colonel Higgins into his office and read a letter from Mr. McGeorge
Bundy which discussed secrecy measures necessary related to CubaCIAoperations. Admiral Riley directed Colonel Higgins to have the nature of
this letter put out through SACSA control to SACSA contact points to insure an
adequate system for secrecy within the military services. Admiral Riley stated
he was returning the letter to Mr. Gilpatric as he did not want written
communication by SACSA, but to put this out orally. This was transmitted to
Colonel Wyman who will take the action to prepare an appropriate memorandum for
the record to be filed with General Ingelido in accordance with further
direction by Admiral Riley.

• 17. General Wheeler, Chief of Staff of
the Army, called and questioned us concerning SACSA's access for the knowledge
of such operations as mentioned in the McGeorge Bundy letter. I advised him
that our Pendulum system was in being but that I would look into it in greater
detail to determine that it met the letter as well as the spirit of the
memorandum. I stated I believed this was so but had not had reason to do it
until this date and therefore did not give him a positive answer at that time.

Friday, July 15, 2016

After decades of study there may not
be a consensus as to who killed President Kennedy but we can come to a firm
determination as to the mechanism of murder - how it was planned and conducted
- the MO - the modus operandi being that of a covert intelligence operation. (1)

That is a specially designed
operation that is meant to remain secret if successful and shield those
actually responsible by using certain covert operational techniques such as
case officers, cut outs and psychological deceptions.

According to the U.S. Department
of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms, "a covert operation (also known as covert ops) is 'an operation that is so planned and executed as to
conceal the identity of or permit plausible denial by the sponsor.' It is
intended to create a political effect which can have implications in the
military, intelligence or law enforcement arenas affecting either the internal
population of a country or individuals outside of it. Covert operations aim to
secretly fulfill their mission objectives without any parties knowing who
sponsored or carried out the operation." (2)

For the law that supposedly governs
the use of covert ops by the U.S. government see:

The names of those actually
responsible for what happened at Dealey Plaza isn't the secret the government
is trying to protect, it's the method of their madness that must be kept under
wraps, and the mechanism is something that can be exposed - the means by which
President Kennedy was disposed of and deposed.

There were plots and there were
plans.

The movie "Executive
Action" has Texas oil men sitting around plotting to get rid of JFK, Oliver Stone has an odd assortment of covert characters sitting around plotting
to kill JFK, (3) and even Matthew Smith - who recognized the second part of the
plot to blame the assassination on Castro communists himself speculates about a
group of renegade agents and mobsters plotting to kill JFK. (4)

Mobsters are frequently perceived as
plotting the Dealey Plaza hit, and the sniper murder of Bugsy Siegel establishes
a president, (5) but the FBI's extensive audio surveillance of the suspected
mobsters failed to come up with any such plotting or even foreknowledge of the
crime. (6)

The CIA and the Mafia plotted to
poison Castro and even put the plot into motion even before the Kennedy administration, (7) but it never materialized and such plotting was cut off after J.E.Hover
informed RFK of these shenanigans. (8)

After William Harvey was removed
from the CIA's Cuban operations task force and replaced by Desmond Fitzgerald,
some of the earlier plots were kept functioning, and a new round of more
serious planning began. (9)

There were plots that failed, and
then there were plans - detailed, prepared, calculated, tactical contingency
plans to attack and kill Fidel Castro, spark a full scale invasion and restore
some semblance of democratic capitalism to Cuba.

On September 25, 1963, when Air Force chief of staff Gen. Curtis LeMay was temporarily chair while General Taylor was in Vietnam, Desmond FitzGerald briefed the Joint Chiefs on Cuban operations, including the "detailed study" they were making of the July 20, 1944 Valkyrie plot to kill Hitler to apply it to Castro and Cuba. (10)

Some of the plans to kill Castro
included a psychological warfare ploy - a " Remember the Main,"
Tonkin Gulf, Northwoods style provocation designed to spark a full scale
invasion of Cuba that Operational Plans - what they call 'Oplans" were already in
place. (11)

Some of the plans to kill Castro
included planting evidence to implicate Russians and communists in the assassination in order to
protect the real assassins, just as the Dealey Plaza operation included the
black propaganda provision to blame Castro communists.

But his plan - if it was his plan to
kill JFK - succeeded - and if he was solely responsible for the deed, Oswald
should be viewed as the world's best Lone Wolf assassin rather than the
deranged loser his accusers portray him as.

What happened at Dealey Plaza,
regardless of what you believe the details are, was not so much a plot, as it
has previously been perceived, but was a plan - a covert operational plan that
had the psych war twist of blaming the action on Castro, with the
intention of sparking an invasion of Cuba.

The difference between plots and
plans is that plots are basically hatched by people sitting around socially or
at meetings talking about committing a seemingly worthwhile crime, while a plan
is set in detail, engineered, planned and choreographed down to the minute if
not second, using trained operatives and specialists who practice in advance
and conduct a plan that is approved by higher authority - as they put it, and
is financed and then executed to precision, with a cover-story prepared and put
in place to protect the perpetrators.

Lots of undocumented plotting went
on, but only a few specific plans were prepared, few enough for us to keep
track of and concentrate on the most relevant ones.

Since there were too many plots and
plans to kill Castro to keep track of we will focus only on the limited number
of documented plans. And of them we will be concerned only with the ones that
include using a sniper firing at an open moving vehicle. They include the
Pathfinder plans for a sniper with high powered rifle with scope to shoot
Castro as he rode by in an open jeep, and the Hemingway House plot - not a
plan, to get Castro when he visited the Hemingway House, as he was known to
have done when Mary Hemingway visited. (13)

While the Hemingway House plot was
almost an afterthought, - an opportunity missed, Pathfinder was a very
specific plan for a sniper with a high powered rifle and scope to soot Castro
when he rode in an open jeep to or from the DuPont Xanadu estate, as he
frequently did. (14)

We only know about the Pathfinder
plan because a number of National Photo Interpretation Center (NPIC) employees
assigned to JM\WAVE station in Miami told the Assassinations Records Review
Board (ARRB) that the Pathfinder records were kept in the NPIC section
apart from regular office files. The NPIC supplied detailed photos and layouts
of the DuPont estate in support of the Pathfinder plan, but it was
"Disapproved," and according to ARRB records the NPIC files were then
sent after the assassination to the Smithsonian on orders of RFK.

There are also reports that indicate
Rolando Cubela (aka AMLASH) lived next door to the North Shore resort, and the
CIA did give him a poison pen and offered a high powered rifle to kill Castro.

Cubela’s case officer, Desmond FitzGerald falsely claimed to represent
RFK, and was the same officer who briefed the Joint Chiefs of Staff (on
September 25, 1963) on the detailed study of the 1944 plot to kill Hitler to be
adapted and used against Castro.

While Pathfinder was a specific
tactical plan that was "disapproved," Valkyrie was a strategic plan
to kill Hitler, take over the German Nazi government and end World War II, and
included a number of participants that became involved in the assassination of
President Kennedy.

Pathfinder - Rosselli & RFK at
JMWAVE

As Bill Turner concluded, it is now
apparent that one of the CIA plots to kill Castro was redirected to JFK at
Dealey Plaza, but it hasn't been determined which plan it was, something that I
believe can be done.

David Atlee Phillips even said that
what happened at Dealey Plaza was the plan they had devised for Castro. (15)

John Rosselli, who first revealed
the CIA - Mafia plots to kill Castro to Jack Anderson, was talking from
personal knowledge when he said that one of the CIA anti-Castro Cuban commando
teams, trained by JMWAVE and sent in to Cuba was captured, tortured and sent
back to kill JFK at Dallas. (16)

That RFK or JFK knew of or approved that operation
is what Peter Dale Scott calls the Phase Three version of events. (17)

There were numerous such teams that
were trained, armed and dispatched to Cuba. As Watergate burglar Rolando
Martinez, a JMWAVE boat Captain said, he took many such teams to Cuba armed
with high powered rifles with scopes, “not to be used to hunt rabbits.” (18)

Most significant is the JMWAVE team
sent in on October 31, 1963 - David Atlee Phillips birthday. That team and
their weapons were captured and paraded on Cuban TV, and their names are
published by Carlos Bringuier in his book, Red Friday. (19)

That mission also exposed Collins Radio
on the front page of the New York Times as a cover-company for the CIA. (20)

Rosselli would have first hand
knowledge of these affairs because of his close personal and professional
association with William Harvey, head of the CIA's Cuban Task Force W until he
was replaced by Desmond FitzGerald. Harvey was Rosselli’s CIA case officer and
drinking buddy. (21)

Known as "Colonel
Rosselli" at JMWAVE training bases in the Everglades and remote regions of
the Florida Keys, Rosselli "sponsored" one of the commando maritime
teams, as did Clare Booth Luce and William Paley. (22)

In support of these Cuban operations
the Army assigned two US Army Rangers, Captain Bradley Ayers and Major Edward
Roderick, to train the Cubans in small boat handling, explosives, firearms and basic
sniper techniques. (23)

Ayers detailed his work at JMWAVE in
two books, The War that Never Was and the Zenith Secret. While Ayers as a
soldier was exempt from the CIA's publishing review rules, his first book was
edited and censored in parts by his publisher Bobs-Merrell, who maintained
offices at the Texas School Book Depository, and whose legal attorney was
William Harvey after he left the CIA. (24)

While Ayers trained a team led by
Julio Fernandez, one of Clare Booth Luce's "boys," as she put it,
Roderick trained Rosselli's team at Point Mary, near Key Largo. While
Roderick's specialty was explosives and ordnance, Point Mary was known as the
remote range were they trained the snipers. (25)

Ayers said that he saw Colonel
Roselli at a paramilitary training base in Florida, where RFK once visited by
helicopter and personally met some of the commandos being trained for
infiltration missions. And Ayers says he was personally introduced to RFK at a
CIA JMWAVE safe house mixer on a golf course where RFK met some of the senior
JMWAVE officials and case officers who were to carry out these plans on
infiltration missions. (26)

While Pathfinder was officially
“disapproved,” other missions were approved by the National Security Council,
including destruction of industrial economic targets such as oil facilities,
missions that Ayer’s teams were trained for. (27)

Just as RFK’s close association with
some of the Bay of Pigs survivors jeopardized his security, so did his meeting
Cuban commandos and JMWAVE case officers who supervised them.

At the time of the Garrison
investigation in New Orleans, Jack Martin (Scruggs), the first to call attention
to Oswald’s association with Guy Banister and David Ferrie, later wrote a series of
articles for a Houston, Texas weekly co-authored with David Lewis, who also
claimed to have known Oswald. In one of these articles - the other
Martin and Lewis wrote about the “Homme Report,” a Congressional Report they
said implicated RFK in the CIA plots to kill Castro.

(28)

The Phase Three scenario, another
fall back position, after the Castro Commie Conspiracy and Lone Nut scenarios
are dismissed, is that JFK was killed by a conspiracy his brother Robert knew about
and approved.

[For footnotes - see below - still in progress]

The Strategic Plan - Valkyrie II

If Pathfinder was the tactical
"off the shelf" sniper plan to kill Castro that was officially
"disapproved," and turned on JFK at Dealey Plaza, then Valkyrie was
the overall strategic plan that was originally designed by Nazi military
officers to kill Hitler, that was studied by the CIA to be used against Castro,
but turned up in Dealey Plaza instead.

From what we know happened at Dealey
Plaza it fits the Pathfinder tactical plan as a sniper ambush of a target
riding in a moving open vehicle, an in the field - on the ground operation that
was part of a larger strategic plan to not only kill the president but
psychological deceptions to ensure the tactical operators escaped and those
actually responsible were never identified or brought to justice.

This overall strategic plan would
also see to the takeover of the federal government, control vital communications and the news and media so in
the words of the Valkyrie planners "only the conspiracy speaks."

There were five specific aspects of
the Valkyrie plan that appear at Daley Plaza - five aspects that fits like a
glove and constitute what Senator Richard Schweiker called "the fingerprints
of intelligence."

The five attributes that Valkyrie
shares with the Dealey Plaza operation are:

1) There were a number of key
characters who were personally involved in the original Valkyrie operation and
also with what happened at Dealey Plaza - including Mary Bancroft, best friend of Michael Paine's mother, who Ruth Paine was with when she invited Marina to live with her, Mary Bancroft's lover Alan Dulles who helped design the original Valkyrie plan with Hans Bernd Gisivious, and Volkmar Schmidt, who mentioned the Valkyrie plot to Oswald when he first met him.

2) The operation would piggy back on
an already approved operation and be conducted in mutable phases one part of which would be approved by the victim. Just as Hitler approved the Phase One part
of Valkyrie for the Home Army to take over the major capitol buildings if foreign slave laborers rioted, JFK, RFK were asked to approve the covert operations against Cuba
including Pathfinder and other plans to kill Castro, that would backfire against them.

3) The operation would utilize the Home Guard
in Germany to carry out the original Valkyrie plan while the US Army
Reserves units in Dallas would carry out the operations on the ground at Dealey
Plaza. Exactly how this was done will be explained in detail.

4) Just as the original Valkyrie
plan included a deception plan to blame the assassination of Hitler on the SS
and Gestapo, evidence planted at Dealey Plaza would implicate Communists and
Castro with the intention of sparking a full scale invasion of Cuba.

5) Unlike the Valkyrie plan that
included the takeover of radio and newspapers by the Home Guard, "so only the conspiracy speaks,"
this was accomplished on 11/22/63 by the Collins Radio company control of the Air Force One radio communications,
and the management of the major media by the CIA's
ongoing Mockingbird program.

This fifth attribute comes into play
during the flight home aboard Air Force One when the radio communications were
controlled by Collins Radio, the same company that provided corporate cover for
the CIA radar ship Rex, and after touchdown by LBJ's use of his Executive
Office phones to ensure the planed Phase One scenario - of a Cuban Communist
conspiracy was replaced with the Phase Two lone but case.

The Phase One
deception plan failed to take hold not only because it was clearly transparent and
untrue, but it was rejected by LBJ personally because he recognized it would lead
to a full scale invasion of Cuba and nuclear missile exchange with the Soviets. This Phase One plan is still brought out and paraded before the public on occasion.

ACSI - Assistant Chief of Staff for
Intelligence - US Army Reserves

While the use of the Home Guard in
Germany as part of the Valkyrie plan is clear, - I can hear the groans of those
who are unfamiliar with the role at Dealey Plaza of the officers and men under the command of the Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence - ACSI.

Like the CIA and ONI, ACSI is a full-fledged
intelligence agency run out of the Pentagon, but unlike the CIA it is not
prevented from operating within the USA.

According to the Church Committee ACSI is also the office where the military's MKULTRA drug testing experiments were conducted.

ACSI is the intelligence section of
the Army Reserves - the weekend warriors who are called up to serve during
domestic disasters, civil riots and disturbances, as well as deployed
overseas.

ACSI comes into the Dealey Plaza picture multiple
times.

1) I wasn't aware of ACSI until I
read a book, Our Man in Acapulco, the autobiography of Colonel Frank M.
"Brandy" Brandstetter, the Dallas resident and manager of the Havana
Hilton when Castro first took over and made the Hilton his residence and
headquarters. Brandy was proud of the fact that he was a Colonel in the Army
Reserves and the fact he didn't take orders through
channels but reported directly to Lt. Colonel William Rose, chief of the Army Reserves intelligence
branch - ACSI.

2) I picked up interest in ACSI when
I discovered that after George deMohrenschildt visited Oswald, saw the
rifle, suspected and joked about Oswald taking a shot at Walker, he left for Haiti. DeMohrenschildtz later found a backyard photo Oswald
gave him holding the rifle inscribed "Hunter of Fascists, ha ha." Before going to Haiti DeMohrenschiltz visited CIA officers
in New York City and then went to Washington DC where he met with Dorothie Matlack
and Colonel Sam Kail of ACSI, Kail had been previously posted to the US
embassy in Havana where he worked with Brandy, David Atlee Phillips and David
Morales. Did DeMohrenschildtz tell them about Oswald, the rifle and Walker?

3) While deMohrensciltz went to
Haiti, Oswald went to New Orleans where he got an apartment on Magazine Street.
A week before Oswald himself knew he would be living there, his future
residence would be known by Dr.\Col. Jose Rivera, of US Army Reserves ACSI, who also
expressed knowledge of Oswald shooting at Walker. How did he know that if DeMohrenschildt didn't tell them?

4) Back on the ground in Dallas, a
few days before the assassination, on November 19, Ruth Paine and Marina were visited in Irving by Colonel James "JD" Wilmerth, USAR-ACSI, who questioned them for hours.

5) Although he wasn't approved by
the Secret Service, the Pilot car that drove a half mile ahead of the motorcade
included a backseat passenger Lt. Colonel George Whitmyer, who was responsible
for all US Army Reserve operations in that region of Texas, the guy Colonel Brandy
didn't report to.

6) The driver of the pilot car,
Dallas Police Captain Lumpkin, did report to him, as did most of the DPD
Special Services Unit that worked out of a special office at the Texas State
Fairgrounds. The Pilot car was responsible for observing the motorcade route to determine if everything was safe and to look for any possible hazards or potential problems. None were seen. When Lumpkin made the turn from
Houston to Elm he pulled to the curb in front of the Texas Schoolbook
Depository to tell one of the three traffic policemen that the motorcade was a
few minutes away, inadvertently informing the Sixth Floor sniper sixty feet
above them, rifle in hand.

7) Then in the hours after the
assassination, Col. Jack Crichton, 488th
Military Intelligence detachment, USAR-ACSI, provided the Dallas Police with an
interpreter, who misinterpreted key elements of Marina Oswald's statements.
Crichton was also responsible for operating the Emergency Management Command Post
that was located in a nuke proof underground bunker at the Texas State
Fairgrounds, near the DPD Special Services Unit offices.

8) Another DPD Special Services
officer who served in the Army Reserves (Springfellow), based on Marina's statements, sent an official
message to the US Air Force Tactical Strike Command in support of the Phase One
- Castro Cuban Conspiracy, apparently before LBJ put the skids on it and
reverted to the Phase Two lone but scenario.

So while there were many domestic
intelligence agencies represented at Dealey Plaza, ACSI was all
over the place, and their files and records should reflect the key roles their
officers played before, during and after the assassination.

Actionable Intelligence on Valkyrie
and Pathfinder Plans

1- Support
Jim Lesar's Valkyrie FOIA; maybe use July 20 as a promotional date;

2
- Support Tony Bothello's FOIA appeals
on Rosselli, et al;

3 - See that relevant records are included in JFK Collection and review
them including ACSI, JMWAVE, Task Force W, JCS, NPIC, Pathfinder, Hemingway House, DuPont
Estate, NPIC records at the Smithsonian, etc.;

4 - File new FOIA requests under the new revised FOIA law for military and CIA
records on US Ranger Capt. Bradley Ayers, Maj. Edward Ridderick and all of the ACSI Colonels.

5 - Get a copy of the so-called Homme Report from Congress; (possibly
a Canadian Senate report).

6 - Get all information available on each of the three dozen or so
examples - case studies of the specific attempts to blame the JFK assassination
on Castro and apply the STASM formula for detecting and exposing such black
propaganda.

7 - The co-author of Brandy's autobiographies lives in DC and says that he has boxes of Brandy's papers that could shed some additional light on these matters.

Footnotes to Of Plots and Plans - Pathfinder and Valkyrie

(1) See: MO - Modus Operandi

(2) Covert Op - defined and law

(3) Executive Action - the movie

(4) Mathew Smith - The Second Plot

(5) Bugsy Siegel shot by sniper.

(6) HSCA testimony of mob expert on FBI tap tapes.

(7) CIA and Castro under Eisenhower

(8) RFK and the plots. When he learned of them he said, "I put a stop to it."

(9) William Harvey replaced by Desmond FitzGerald.

(10) Desmond FitzGerald briefs JCS - See: Higgins Memo

(11) OpPlans for invasion of Cuba - See: Mary Ferrell

(12) Robert Oswald - Frontline and book - "Lee"

(13) Hemingway House plot - See: The Old Man and the CIA - The Nation.

(14) Pathfinder

(15) David Atlee Phillips on Oswald

(16) John Rosselli on turned teams.

(17) Peter Dale Scott on Phase III - Blame Bobby

(18) Rolando Martinez as JMWAVE boat captain.

(19) Bringuier, Red Friday list of commando names

(20 ) New York Times, November 1, 1963, page 1, article and photo on the Rex.

(21) William Harvey and John Rosselli -

(22) Clare Booth Luce and William Pawley as Cuban commando team boat sponsors

(23) Ayers, Bradley - "The War that Never Was" and "Zenith Secret" re: US Army Ranger Capt. Ayers and Maj. Edward Rodderick assigned to CIA JMWAVE.

(24) William Harvey at Bobbs-Merrell

(25) Point Mary sniper team training.

(26) RFK at JMWAVE and Op Training Base in Everglades. Ayers, Bradley

(27) Pathfinder "disapproved" while others approved by National Security Council.